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God had to create disco music so I could be born and be successful


DONNA SUMMER
Monday, September 15, 2014 dailytarheel.com Volume 122, Issue 72
CRUNCHATIZE ME,
CAPN JACK
Male
survivors
see little
support
Campus Health does not offer
equal support for male survivors.
By Carolyn Ebeling
Assistant University Editor
The University knows it cant provide identi-
cal services for male and female survivors of
sexual violence.
But instead of providing equal resources
for both groups, Counseling and Psychological
Services has largely pushed the needs of male
survivors off campus.
There is only enough interest to run one
sexual assault survivor group on campus, which
is open to female-identified survivors.
We have only had enough interest to run one
survivor support group on campus, and since
the majority of survivors are women, we chose
to offer the group to female-identified survi-
vors, said Allen OBarr, director of Counseling
and Psychological Services.
About 1.6 million men, or 1.4 percent of
men, in the United States reported being raped,
according to the National Intimate Partner
and Sexual Violence Survey by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention.
OBarr said if there was enough interest, his
department would provide a male-identified
survivor group, but being the only male in a
female-identified survivor group could create
problems.
It could be harmful to the male survivor if he is
the only male survivor in a support group, he said.
OBarr said his department frequently refers
both male and female survivors to support
groups at the Orange County Rape Crisis Center.
Shamecca Bryant, executive director of the
Orange County Rape Crisis Center, said the
center gets direct referrals from CAPS and other
mental health professionals.
Of the 597 primary and secondary survivors
of sexual violence the rape crisis center served
last year, 16 percent identified as male, Bryant
said.
For the past three years, we have served
roughly 100 male-identified survivors annually
on our 24/7 help line and our support group
services, Bryant said in an email.
Sophomore Zackary Green said support for
male survivors is not as prominent because it
challenges the typical norms regarding sexual
violence.
Since sexual assaults against males are usu-
ally perpetrated by other males, this makes it an
issue that falls outside the prevalent heteronor-
mativity that governs our society, which margin-
alizes focus on the subject, he said.
The discrepancy in services offered for male
and female survivors of sexual assault is evident,
even in the Universitys bathrooms.
Senior Garrison Gordon said he has never
noticed sexual assault information fliers in
mens bathrooms on campus. The fliers, which
are on almost every stall door in womens bath-
rooms, are scarce in mens bathrooms.
Posters about support and reporting options
for sexual assault are placed in restrooms
throughout campus, including mens restrooms,
Ew Quimbaya-Winship, UNCs Deputy Title IX
Coordinator, said in an email.
Gordon said he sees the sexual assault of men
and women as very different conversations.
The sexual assault of women is interesting
because there are institutions of culture around
University life that promotes sexual assault of
women, whereas with men it tends to be more
interpersonal, he said.When a weekend hap-
pens at UNC, there are different rituals that pro-
mote sexual assault of women that doesnt do the
same for men.
Gordon said he thinks male and female sur-
vivors have difficulty speaking out for different
reasons.
Its like addressing an instance of a man
being sexually assaulted versus addressing the
culture that promotes sexual assault of women,
he said. I think they are equally as valid.
Gordon said his involvement in Carolina
United and Nourish-UNC, both social justice-
oriented programs, has allowed him to become
a part of the more vocal conversation around
sexual assault on campus.
There are lots of groups in the Campus Y
doing work related to sexual assault and gender
violence, he said. I think its an up-and-coming
conversation around the general sexual assault
conversation happening on campus.
Bryant said male sexual assault survivors can
feel uncomfortable reporting and asking for help.
The stigma around sexual violence still
makes it challenging for men to feel comfortable
accessing services, she said. Additionally, there
is often a lack of support available for men,
particularly in smaller communities where con-
fidentiality may be of the utmost concern.
university@dailytarheel.com
By Aren Besson
Staff Writer
Chapel Hill Town Manager
Roger Stancil said residents
recent accusations of financial
mismanagement are not true
and lack context.
In a petition that was present-
ed to the Town Council Sept. 8, a
group of residents pointed to six
instances in which town funds
were poorly managed, such as
the recent $1.2 million renova-
tion of Town Hall and the towns
failure to allocate funds in recent
years to pay for its unfunded $56
million pension liability.
The petition also claimed that
funding for the managers office
has increased by 45 percent in
the past five years as funding for
many other town services has
decreased.
I am proud of the town of
Chapel Hills financial manage-
ment and our consistent and
transparent reporting of budget
matters, Stancil said in an email
to the town government. Stancil
By Cain Twyman
Staff Writer
More than 500 students par-
tied in silence at a disco hosted by
the Residence Hall Association
on Saturday the largest event
in the organizations history.
Planning for the Silent Disco,
which cost $4,700, began in
April. RHA wants to host more
large-scale events in the future,
RHA President Taylor Bates said.
In the week before the event,
Bates said RHA made a large
promotional push. He said the
organization had expected at
least 300 students to attend,
underestimating the actual num-
ber of participants by more than
200 students.
Bates said RHA increased the
attendance limit in Fetzer Gym
due to the interest surrounding
the event.
We hope to make this a tradi-
tional thing, he said.
At the disco, students wore
wireless headphones and could
tune into three different radio
channels represented by dif-
ferent colors. A green channel
played music automatically
selected by Pandora, a red chan-
nel played music mixed by senior
Trevor Dougherty, known as
good ratio, and a blue channel
played music mixed by senior
Emma Rich, or DJ EMdMA.
Before the event, Dougherty,
who has been a disc jockey for
about five years, said he was very
excited to be a part of the Silent
Disco because it was the first
event of its kind at UNC.
You literally have music in
your head. I thought it would be
really cool (to have) the chance
to be in peoples heads, he said.
Rich, who has been a DJ for
By Deborah Harris
Staff Writer
Douglas Paley describes the moment.
His 16-year-old son was sitting at break-
fast, weighing business ideas for a summer
entrepreneurship program. Suddenly, a
McDonalds semitrailer drove by, plastered
with the image of french fries and a Big
Mac.
Jack looked at me and said, What about
an alternative to junk food? And thats
where it all started, Douglas Paley said.
Three years later, Jack Paley is a success-
ful entrepreneur, sophomore at UNC, co-
founder of two UNC ventures and co-author
of a book, One Bite at a Time, telling his
story. Just like the McDonalds truck, Paley
is on a roll.
In June 2011, Jack Paley launched Aspen
Crunch, a food specialty company that
develops dehydrated fruit and vegetable
snacks, in his hometown of Aspen, Colorado.
Paley and his father sold the snacks out of
a local farmers market, catering to health-
conscious customers.
What we put in our bodies relates 100
percent to how we feel not only at the end
of the day, but throughout the week and
throughout our lives, Jack Paley said.
Since then, products like Crater Lake
Kale and Pyramid Peak Pineapple have
generated more than $50,000 in revenue.
Now, Jack Paley is at UNC to continue his
momentum with the help of UNCs business
school and entrepreneurship program.
We have built a lot of entrepreneurs
out of UNC. There are many, many, many
who have learned it here, said Ted Zoller,
director of the Center for Entrepreneurial
Studies.
But now because of our success, (stu-
dents) identify our program as a leader and
one that can take them to the next level.
Jack is in that category.
Through the program, Jack Paley receives
one-on-one coaching with Zoller to both
develop his business and balance work with
school.
I mentor the very best kids, Zoller said.
I can tell they have the biggest needs, and
they need an advocate within the University
to help them navigate the academic waters.
Sophomore Jack Paley started his company in 2011
DTH/ANI GARRIGO
UNC sophomore Jack Paley created Aspen Crunch three years ago. Purchasable online and at
several Colorado farmers markets, it consists of dried fruits, granola and other natural ingredients.
DTH/CLAIRE COLLINS
Over 400 UNC students attended the Resident Housing
Associations Silent Disco in Fetzer Hall on Saturday.
about four years, said she defi-
nitely wanted to be involved
when she heard about the
event.
Ive never done anything like
a silent disco. Ive heard about
them, and the idea is really awe-
some, she said.
Rich, who played hip hop,
electronic and early 2000s pop
Silent disco quietly owns the night
The event was the
largest-ever hosted by
the RHA.
Stancil responds to petitions accusations
The Chapel Hill Town
Manager denied any
wrongdoing.
Roger Stancil is
the manager for
the Town of Chapel
Hill. He oversees
Chapel Hills bud-
get and all town
employees.
did not respond to requests for
comment made through the
Town Managers Office.
Stancil provided a response
to each of the six accusations of
mismanagement in that email to
the town.
While admitting he had
allowed consulting costs for
the towns Central West Small
Area Plan to become exorbitant,
Stancil said he learned from the
experience. In the future, the
town will better train project
managers before beginning the
planning process.
To meet the interests of the
council appointed steering com-
mittee, the consultant continued
with work over the original con-
tract amount, said Stancil, add-
ing that it was the Town Council
that had requested extra meet-
ings for the Central West Small
Area Plan to better incorporate
SEE SNACK FOOD, PAGE 5
SEE STANCIL, PAGE 5
SEE SILENT DISCO, PAGE 5
TODAY
Flyleaf Books Author Event:
Join author Katy Simpson Smith
as she discusses her debut nov-
el, The Story of Land and Sea,
which chronicles the fnal years
of the American Revolution in a
coastal North Carolina town.
Time: 7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Location: Flyleaf Books
ConnectCarolina Sneak Peek
Information Fair: Join UNCs
Information Technology Services
staf for a sneak peek at the
revamped ConnectCarolina for
Finance and HR/Payroll software,
which goes live Oct. 1. All faculty
and staf members are welcome.
Time: 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Location: Student Union, Great
Hall
The Talmuds Great Dispute of
Religiosity: Attendees of this talk
by Menachem Fisch, director of
the Center for Religious and Inter-
religious Studies Project at Tel Aviv
University, can learn more about
the Talmuds dispute of religiosity.
Time: 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Location: Hyde Hall, University
Room
Department of State Intern-
ships Interest Meeting: Stu-
NOTED. Paul Smiths College in upstate
New York has taken the stereotype of
drunken college students to a whole new
level. The school is now offering a craft-
brewing minor. No, we arent kidding.
The minor teaches students how to mar-
ket, distribute and promote beer. So UNC,
when exactly will this be offered to us?
QUOTED. I exercise my 1st amend-
ment right 2 protest the desecration of my
name#UseISIL
Isis Martinez, who has had trouble
sharing a name with the Middle Eastern
terrorist group ISIS. Martinez wants the
media to use ISIL so she can again be called
by her own name without people cringing.
A
nd you thought that bird poop falling on you was bad? Think
again. The puss caterpillar has taken over Floridas trees, and the
results are proving to be incredibly dangerous. The caterpillars
are covered in what looks like fuzzy fur but turns out to actually
be spines infused with venom that some have said leave a sting equivalent
to that of a jellyfish. And as if that isnt bad enough, these caterpillars are
falling from the trees. The treatment, should you come in contact with one
of these things? The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention suggests
putting tape on the affected area and ripping it off until the poisonous spines
come out. Then try easing the pain with ice. Translation: just suck it up, deal
with it and wonder what this world has come to.
Poison is falling from the skies
From staf and wire reports
DAILY
DOSE
Someone refused to
pay the fare for a taxi and
then resisted arrest at 120
E. Franklin St. at 12:34 a.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
The person was drunk and
disruptive and was shouting
profanities, reports state.
Someone reported a bur-
glary without force at 2451
Sedgefield Drive at 12:35 a.m.
Friday, according to Chapel
Hill police reports.
An Apple iPad and
MacBook, valued at $900 total,
were stolen, reports state.
Someone stole food valued
at $1 from the Harris Teeter
at 210 S. Estes Drive at 11:54
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone stole a yard
sign from a residence at 422
W. Cameron Ave. at 4:54
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
The sign was valued at
$50, the report states.
Someone reported that
some items had been suspi-
ciously knocked over in her
garage on the 8300 block
of Loch Laven Lane at 9:49
a.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someones car was hit by
a rock that came flying from
a weed eater in front of 309
N. Greensboro St. at 8:35
a.m. Thursday, according to
Carrboro police reports.
Someone received a
suspicious phone call at 417
Tinkerbell Road at 4:01
p.m. Thursday, according to
Chapel Hill police reports.
Someone attempted
to steal a bicycle from the
Granville Towers parking lot
at 2:22 a.m. Friday, accord-
ing to Department of Public
Safety reports.
To make a calendar submission,
email calendar@dailytarheel.
com. Please include the date of
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attach a photo if you wish. Events
will be published in the newspaper
on either the day or the day before
they take place.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
dents considering international
career paths can learn more about
internship opportunities with the
U.S. Department of State. Attend-
ees can meet the Diplomat-in-
Residence Richard Jaworski.
Time: 5:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
Location: FedEx Global Educa-
tion Center, DeBerry Boardroom
3009
POLICE LOG
News Monday, September 15, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 2
FROM THE ARCHIVES
T
his photograph ran on the front page of The
Daily Tar Heel on Thursday, Sept. 15, 2011, one
day after President Barack Obama visited
N.C. State University to speak about the 2011 American
Jobs Act to a crowd of more than 9,000 people.
DTH FILE PHOTO
Due to a reporting error, Thursdays page 6 story UNC team tracks Ebola stats with site incor-
rectly identified the gender of the president of Liberia. Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf is a
woman.
Due to a reporting error, Fridays front page story Hiring rates are high, but retention is low for
minorities incorrectly stated the organization responsible for hiring 44 minority faculty members
in 2013. They were hired by the University. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the errors.
The Daily Tar Heel reports any inaccurate information published as soon as the error is discovered.
Editorial corrections will be printed below. Errors committed on the Opinion Page have corrections printed
on that page. Corrections also are noted in the online versions of our stories.
Contact Managing Editor Katie Reilly at managing.editor@dailytarheel.com with issues about this policy.
CORRECTIONS
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Just one night to experience a global
music icon in your own backyard.
LIVE AT UNCS MEMORIAL HALL
In , ROLLING STONE described Youssou NDour
as perhaps the most famous singer alive. Creator of
mbalax, the propulsive, percussive, melodic pop music
that still dominates Senegalese radio today, more than
years aer its birth, NDour is a global music icon
that cant be missed.
YOUSSOU NDOUR
TOMORROW
NIGHT!
SEPTEMBER at : PM
News Monday, September 15, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 3
Common Core could face end in NC
By Benji Schwartz
Staff Writer
The Common Core, a set of
national standards for measuring
student achievement in K-12 English
and math, is in limbo in North
Carolina following state lawmakers
decision to review the standards.
A law signed by Gov. Pat McCrory
on July 22 will create a commis-
sion to examine English and math
test standards in the states public
schools and recommend potential
changes.
While 43 states have adopted the
standards, North Carolina is one of a
number of states, including Georgia,
South Carolina and Alabama, that
have tried to put the brakes on
Common Core, which was launched
in 2009.
Jeff Nash, spokesman for Chapel
Hill-Carrboro City Schools, said the
district isnt pleased with the move
away from Common Core.
Our school district has dedicated
a significant portion of our limited
resources money, time and energy
into ensuring our teachers can be
successful with the Common Core,
Nash said. We believe we are mak-
ing great progress, and we are disap-
pointed in the General Assemblys
decision to move away from it.
After adopting the Common
Core, North Carolina faced a drop
in passing rates on state end-
of-year tests due to the higher
standards, said Matt Ellinwood,
education policy analyst at the N.C.
Justice Center. He said this was
expected and that, over time, teach-
ers adjust to the new standards.
But the proportion of students
earning proficient scores in N.C.
public schools increased from
44.7 percent to 58.6 percent from
2012-13 to 2013-14, according to
a Sept. 4 statement from the N.C.
Department of Public Instruction.
An adjustment in North
Carolinas standardized tests was the
primary reason for a higher passing
rate, Ellinwood said. In 2013, the
scoring scale was changed, he said,
meaning that test grades of one or
two is failing, and grades of three,
four or five are now passing.
Common Core is well designed to
prepare K-12 students for life after
high school, Ellinwood said.
North Carolina needs to have
standards that are meaningful and
linked to what we need our stu-
dents to know and be successful
when they graduate and go to col-
lege and get jobs and perform their
civic duties, he said.
Sen. Josh Stein, D-N.C., who
opposed the review of Common
Core, said the national standards are
responsible for the expectations of
North Carolina students being the
highest that they have ever been.
The commission is going to look
at (the standards), and its likely to
be packed with people who are hos-
tile to higher standards, he said.
The review commission will be
composed of nine political appoin-
tees and two appointments by the
state Board of Education.
Nash said the district is con-
cerned that the committee is
separate from the North Carolina
Department of Public Instruction.
He said CHCCS would rather see
decisions on student curriculum
made by education experts.
Stein said that many teachers sup-
port the Common Core because it
allows them to teach at a deeper level.
I dont think we need to be
afraid of asking more of our chil-
dren, he said.
state@dailytarheel.com
COMMON CORE IN BRIEF
The Common Core standards in
English language arts and math
were launched in 2009:

The Common Core idea was
developed by state governors and
school district leaders, with the
input of teachers and parents.

The standards are designed to
prepare K-12 students for colleges
and careers and standardize that
preparation nationwide.

How the Common Core is imple-
mented and taught in each state is
determined at the state level.

Forty-three states have adopted
Common Core in public schools.

There has been some pushback
nationwide against Common Core.
State lawmakers voted
to review and possibly
change the standards.
LEGACY CARE PROTECTS
PETS FROM UNCERTAINTY
Carrboro
encourages
social enterprise
By Holly West
City Editor
The Town of Carrboro is using a government
grant to encourage local business leaders and
entrepreneurs to grow their organizations in a
socially conscious way.
The Partnership for a Sustainable Community,
a nonprofit partner of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro
Chamber of Commerce, is hosting a series of
workshops this fall targeted toward people who
run businesses or nonprofit organizations, or
residents who want to start one.
We want to really improve the way organi-
zations impact their communities, said Aaron
Nelson, executive director of the Partnership and
CEO of the Chamber of Commerce.
The program, called Grow in Carrboro, will
be held on four consecutive Monday mornings at
the Carrboro Century Center starting Oct. 6.
The workshops are free and open to residents,
businesses and nonprofits that are based in or
serve Carrboro.
Nelson said each session will address different
topics, but all of them will follow the theme of
social enterprise a business concept through
which an organization focuses on improving its
community and not just making a profit.
Were looking for businesses that want to do
good in the community or nonprofits that want
to use business strategies to be more successful,
he said.
Applications are open until Oct. 1, but people
interested in participating should sign up as
soon as possible, said Grow in Carrboro Project
Manager Blake Tedder.
Preference will be given to people who can
commit to attending all four workshops.
There will be a different agenda every week
that builds on the previous week, Tedder said.
Grow in Carrboro is being funded by a federal
community development block grant for small
business and entrepreneurial assistance, said
Annette Stone, Carrboros economic and com-
munity development director.
The town applied for the grant to fund sewer
infrastructure problems on Main Street.
One of the requirements of the grant was that
the town spend $5,000 of it on a program to cre-
ate an entrepreneurial environment.
Tedder said he hopes the workshops create a
close-knit community of business and nonprofit
leaders who can use their diverse experiences to
help each other improve their organizations.
Were going to have a lot of Carrboro busi-
nesses and organizations in the same room at the
same time that can possibly work together, he
said.
city@dailytarheel.com
A series of workshops in October
will focus on community impact.
DTH/KENDALL BAGLEY
Laura Griest, the executive director of Paws4ever, pets one of the nonprofits cats, Fajita, as she leads a tour of the compound.
Paws4ever gives pet owners peace of mind for future
By Mary Taylor Renfro
Staff Writer
Situated on 50 acres of land equipped with
a learning center, dog park, nature trail and
adoption center, Paws4ever Animal Sanctuary
has never been a typical animal shelter.
But a new addition to the property makes
it one of only a handful of shelters across
the country offering long-term care for pets
whose owners can no longer look after them
due to sickness, aging or death.
Paws4ever celebrated the official launch
of its Legacy Care program Saturday. The
program allows pets to receive the care they
need if something happens to their owners
without being turned over to a county shel-
ter or a reluctant friend or family member.
Twelve pets have already been signed up.
Paws4ever Executive Director Laura Griest
said the staff at the shelter developed the pro-
gram after they realized there was a need in
the community that Paws4ever could fill.
Imagine if you have your dogs or cats,
and theres no one in your family or network
of friends whos able to take your pet if
something happens to you, Griest said.
There are people who want to plan
ahead, who really should plan ahead, in the
same way a person actually plans for the
care of their kids.
Once their owners can no longer care
for them, pets enrolled in the program will
temporarily live in the shelters Legacy
Care Residence, a fully furnished apart-
ment, until they are placed in the home of
a Legacy Care Provider, who will care for
them until they are adopted.
If approved through an application pro-
cess, the owner must pay a $1,000 upfront
membership fee for each pet to join and a
$10,000 endowment for the animals long-
term care. The endowment can be paid
upfront through a life insurance policy or in
a provision in the owners will.
Although the cost is expensive, Griest said
it is much less than the endowments for other
shelters with similar programs in the country,
which range from $25,000 to $100,000.
Griest noted that the current endowment
cost may not be sustainable in the future.
Melissa Bennett, president of the board of
directors for Paws4ever, said the Legacy Care
program is a unique and valuable service.
I think whats so special about the
Legacy program is just the fact that its the
only program of its kind in the area, and I
think its what people are looking for so
that if anything happens to them, they know
their pet is cared for, Bennett said.
Griest said the Legacy Care program
gives seniors who otherwise may not have
been able to adopt the opportunity to do so.
Thom Gradisher was one of the first people
involved in the program. He and his wife
enrolled their 7-year-old dog, Baka, this year.
We travel a lot, and we were thinking
about what happens if something happens to
us, and we were talking to our lawyer, and she
suggested this, so it filled a need, he said.
city@dailytarheel.com
CHCCS elementary and middle schools compost their lunch
COURTESY OF DAN SCHNITZER
A new composting initiative in Chapel Hill-Carrboro City Schools will require
students to separate leftover food from their recyclable materials.
By Elise McGlothian
Staff Writer
It will now take a little longer for
children enrolled in Chapel Hill-
Carrboro City Schools to clean up at
the end of lunch but the activity
will prove to be another lesson in
their day.
A new composting initiative
requires middle and elementary
school students to separate their
leftover food from their recyclable
materials.
Instead of throwing all their trash
into one bin, the students will place
their leftover food, recyclable items
and trash in separate bins.
Teachers across the district are
making sure students understand
the purpose of the new composting
initiative.
Kari Hamel, a CHCCS parent,
said in an email that her children,
Seiji, 11, and Fiore Ren, 8, are eager
to participate in the program.
Putting leftovers in the compost
bins and turning it into fertilizer is
easy, said Seiji, a student at Smith
Middle School.
Children have to learn how to
sort their trash, many teachers have
explained the differences to their
students and some schools have
hung signs in their cafeterias.
Hamel credits the science teach-
ers throughout the district for
securing the students eagerness to
participate.
For example, Ms. Massengale,
(a Glenwood Elementary School)
science teacher, provides wonderful
outdoor learning environments for
her students, Hamel said.
Not surprisingly, the students
understand the real world benefits
of composting and recycling.
The composting initiative is an
expansion of the pilot program
launched at four schools during the
2013-14 academic year, said Dan
Schnitzer, the sustainability coordi-
nator for CHCCS.
Estes Hills, Morris Grove and
Northside elementary schools and
Phillips Middle School started sort-
ing their trash during the 2013-14
school year.
Turquoise Parker, a teaching
assistant at Estes Hills Elementary,
said the program worked well last
year but is better this year.
They (the children) actually real-
ly liked it, she said. One thing they
really liked this year was the bigger
signs that say what goes where and
have pictures on them.
Parker said the process is a little
less efficient than throwing all trash in
one bin, but it serves a larger purpose.
Theyre just so used to being able
to throw it away at home, anywhere
they want, and it really does take
time it slows the line down, she
said. But anything to help the envi-
ronment.
An estimated 143 tons of com-
postable waste will be kept out of the
landfill now that all 15 elementary and
middle schools are a part of the initia-
tive, according to a press release.
Since the 2013 closure of the
Orange County landfill, reducing
landfill dumpster costs has been a
primary concern for the district.
By diverting waste from the
landfill, we will also be eliminating a
significant amount of methane that
our food waste would produce while
in the landfill, Schnitzer said. The
program also provides a community
benefit of healthy soil to local farms
and gardens.
city@dailytarheel.com
As a result, about 143 tons
of waste will be diverted
from the landfill.
Established 1893, 121 years of editorial freedom
QUOTE OF THE DAY
FEATURED ONLINE READER COMMENT
Self-congratulation is
not The Carolina Way
Editors note: The follow-
ing letter is a response to a
column written by Glenn
Lippig that ran in The
Daily Tar Heel in April
entitled Dear Tar Heels:
were rich.
TO THE EDITOR:
I am sometimes tempted
to publicly congratulate
myself for exhibiting basic
human decency toward my
peers.
In these moments, I like
to meditate on something
Coach (Dean) Smith once
said that has stuck with me:
You should never be proud
of doing the right thing.
You should just do it.
The Carolina Way is
more than a fuzzy market-
ing scheme to make college
kids feel exceptional. It is
the specific philosophy of
a man who saw humility
as integral to his vision of
success and went above and
beyond to live his life with
honor.
Tar Heels credit players
who make assists, and they
stand against injustice.
They dont need to write
columns about begrudg-
ingly not leaving a drunk
person in the street.
Sarah Hirsch
Carrboro
Muslims should speak
against terrorism
TO THE EDITOR:
At Christians United
for Israels 9/11 gathering,
a Palestinian Muslim girl
humbly apologized for the
activism of Muslim terror-
ists. Her brave acknowl-
edgement of sins commit-
ted by members of her faith
drew sincere appreciation
from the crowd. In that
moment, I empathized with
her apparent frustration,
offense and embarrass-
ment.
As a Christian, I, too,
have been offended and
embarrassed by some hate-
ful, destructive actions of
other Christians, like the
Westboro Baptists. Most
Christians know that such
factions do not represent
the tenets of our faith.
So we condemn their
hypocrisy and try to be
better representatives our-
selves. Nevertheless, liber-
als still pass judgment on
all of Christendom for the
sins of minority factions.
For 13 years, only a
handful of notable Muslims
have been speaking out
against radicals. Just one
month ago, 50 additional
Muslim leaders spoke out,
yet their meeting was not
covered widely in the news.
Muslim incidents have
occurred at Fort Hood and
Boston. In June, a 19-year-
old collegiate was shot
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
In this regard I think we need athletes com-
ing to more than just 75 percent of their
classes.
CarolinaBlueBlood, on athletes being able to miss seven class periods
There is often a lack of support avail-
able for men, particularly in smaller
communities,
Rick Ingram, on support for male survivors of sexual assault
EDITORIAL CARTOON By Jamal Rogers, jmlrgs@gmail.com
A listicle
for your
walks to
class
W
hether youre a
senior living on
North Columbia
Street or a freshman in Hinton
James, walks to class can be
tedious, exhausting and super
awk.
Its sweltering 90-degree heat
or fighting back tears as you
toddle through an Arctic tundra.
Its a beautiful Carolina Blue sky
and youre skipping to your 11
a.m., or its pouring down rain
as you slosh to your 8 a.m. Its
a pleasant stroll to your hall of
academia or a literal sprint to
your final exam that started 10
minutes ago theres really no
in-between.
Walks to class color our lives
with friends, acquaintances
and weird interactions with
old professors who probably
dont remember you. Here is
a list of obstacles you might
encounter on your journey:
People will try to talk to
you: Whoa. Didnt you see me
with my headphones in and
sunglasses on? This look says,
Do not speak words to me. Im
sorry, Daniel from POLI recita-
tion, but Beyonce is walking me
to class, and I dont need you
to ruin it with your waves and
desire for social interaction.
Ask someone else how their
weekend was, Daniel.
You will try to talk to people:
Lets talk about Not Saying
Hey karma. Every time you do
not acknowledge the presence of
someone you legitimately know,
the same will soon happen to
you. Youll yell the name of a pal
you met in the Pit last Tuesday,
and said person will look down
at her phone. Or if her phone
isnt available, shell just pretend
that something in the distance
suddenly looks really interest-
ing. (Word to the wise do
not say hey to friends who are
running. They are probably
running with Beyonce, which
is like being carried by an angel
through a dark abyss.)
Bluetooths (Blueteeth?):
Are you a Wall Street business
tycoon? Are you a soccer mom
on the go whos trying to take
the kids to taekwondo and
give rides to the movies while
also running a book club? No?
Then punt it over a bridge like
Baxter in Anchorman, cause
its gotta go.
Bikers: Theyre in the roads,
on the sidewalks and in your
nightmares. Theyre almost
running into you, riding dan-
gerously fast down hills and
making everyone fear for their
lives. Maybe they could opt for
a better mode of transporta-
tion, like a Razor scooter?
Dance Marathoners:
Theyre coming. They have
clip-boards, they have enthu-
siasm and they have matching
tanks and choreography.
SLOW DAMN WALKERS:
They meet at an undisclosed
location and plan their routes
through heavily trafficked
areas. A line of four walk in
front of you, like a human chain
across the sidewalk. STAY IN
FORMATION, MEN! HOLD
YOUR GROUND! they yell.
They know you woke up late
and are rushing to the Center
for Dramatic Art on the other
side of campus, and theyll stop
at nothing to make sure you
dont get there on time.
Bricks: Yall are just trippin.
Clear eyes, full heart, cant trip.
Do not be embarrassed when
you trip on a brick. If someone
laughs at you, they are sure to
trip as well within the next 24
hours. Its true. Google it.
Jackie OShaughnessy
Handle of Jack
Senior public relations major from
Holly Springs.
Email: joshaugh@live.unc.edu
Due to a Sept. 12 editing error in a correction of Sept.
10s editorial Students Deserve Better, the latest web
update of Student Congresss minutes was incorrectly
identified. Their minutes were last posted in November of
2013. The Daily Tar Heel apologizes for the error.
CORRECTIONS
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Sign and date. No more than two people should sign letters.
Students: Include your year, major and phone number.
Faculty/staff: Include your department and phone number.
Edit: The DTH edits for space, clarity, accuracy and vulgarity. Limit
letters to 250 words.
SUBMISSION
Drop off or mail to our office at 151 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill,
N.C. 27514
Email: opinion@dailytarheel.com
dead in New Jersey by a
Muslim who did it as ven-
geance for U.S. actions in
the Middle East. Domestic
terrorism is here. So why
are liberals outraged by
the critics of radical Islam,
rather than the perpetra-
tors evil deeds?
When honorable mem-
bers of a faith community
fail to exhort their brothers,
then criticism from outsid-
ers should be a wake-up
call, especially when atroci-
ties are committed against
those outsiders.
More American Muslims
should follow the lead of
this lone UNC student who
stirred compassion in my
heart for her own suffer-
ings.
Kathy Arab
Chapel Hill
Gene Nichol shouldnt
get taxpayer funds
TO THE EDITOR:
Gene Nichol: Who is he;
what has he done?
He is an extremely well-
paid lawyer at my UNC law
school, and he is speaking
at my church Sunday
supposedly on poverty. He
has pulled down over a mil-
lion dollars from UNC and
N.C. taxpayers.
He is most famous for
taking down the cross in
the chapel at The College
of William & Mary. At
that time, he engaged in
controversies with Virginia
legislators, the same way he
spends his time demeaning
the N.C. legislature.
He authorized extreme-
ly explicit sex shows on
campus and accused them
of offering him economic
incentives. (Was that
bribery? I dont know.)
They also accuse him of
being disingenuous about
money raised when he was
let go.
All this has been on the
internet for years; I found
no record of his setting the
record straight. These are
his badges of courage.
I found little about
poverty in his background
except the millions he gets
heading a poverty group.
But there are numerous let-
ters to the editor in which
he spends large amounts of
time denigrating the North
Carolina legislature and
the governor (whom he has
practically called a segrega-
tionist). My question: Does
he have any time for teach-
ing? Was it two hours last
week?
Of course, it is his right
to do these things. But
not on my tax dollars.
He should resign, get in
politics, run for office,
become an attacker for
the Democrats and work
with the American Civil
Liberties Union to keep
any mention of God out of
schools (But he already is).
I find that disgusting.
P.H. Craig
Chapel Hill
VIEWPOINTS
B
y operating under laws designed for
another conflict and allying with
repressive regimes, the President has
put us in a precarious strategic and moral
position in the countrys fight against ISIL.
The worlds oldest constitutional democ-
racy ought to honor its founding document.
Congress now needs to take decisive action
for or against further military action.
President Obama is making military deci-
sions justified by laws passed in 2001 and
2002. By updating legislation, Congress
can ensure further deployment and assaults
wont face the same par-
tisan scrutiny that the
2003 invasion of Iraq did.
The U.S. should also
be discerning in its choice
of allies. Egypt and Saudi
Arabia are among them.
These countries have
strong diplomatic ties
to the U.S. but troubled
human rights records.
In 2013, Egyptian
security forces killed at
least 817 pro-Mohamed Morsi protesters,
and havent been held accountable for their
actions, according to Human Rights Watch.
Saudi Arabia has imprisoned Shiite reli-
gious rights activists, according to Freedom
House. Do these sound like countries with
which we should, as President Obama said,
share a common security and humanity?
American leaders should uphold their
Constitution and choose allies wisely if they
want to avoid further protracted military
involvement in the region.
T
he Islamic State of Iraq and the
Levant poses an immediate threat to
American lives and interests, as well
as the general stability of the Middle East.
Because of this and the possibility of a future
threat on American soil, President Obama
is justified in exercising his executive pow-
ers to conduct American-led missions in the
region.
This group poses an immediate threat to
the extensive American interests in the area,
chiefly that of protecting human rights.
Hundreds have been displaced or killed.
Immediate use of uni-
lateral force in the form
of ground troops and air
strikes in Iraq and Syria
to counter this terrorist
threat is appropriate.
ISIL was responsi-
ble for more than 5,500
Iraqi civilian deaths in
2014. The U.S. has an
obligation to protect
civilian lives anywhere
they are threatened so
broadly.
With no international power stepping
up to lead the fight against ISIL, a lack of
American action in this case, action with-
out the direct consent of Congress would
almost certainly, albeit indirectly, lead to
more killings in the area. President Obama
must take military action for the sake of the
safety of all Americans abroad just one
American publicly executed by ISIL weakens
the international reputation and protection
associated with being an American.
THE ISSUE: President Barack Obama announced Sept. 10 that the United States
would begin limited military action meant to degrade and destroy the Islamic
State of Iraq and the Levant. ISIL has been responsible for widespread violence
in Iraq and Syria and for several high-profile executions of journalists.
Obama should
seek legitimate
support for action
Immediate
military action is
necessary
Brian Vaughn
Editorial Board
Member
Kern Williams
Editorial Board
Member
JUSTICE LEAGUE
Seth Rose dissects rumors
about Art Popes future.
N
E
X
T
EDITORIAL BOARD MEMBERS
JENNY SURANE EDITOR, 962-4086 OR EDITOR@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
HENRY GARGAN OPINION EDITOR, OPINION@DAILYTARHEEL.COM
SAM SCHAEFER ASSOCIATE OPINION EDITOR
EDITORS NOTE: Columns, cartoons and letters do not necessarily rep-
resent the opinions of The Daily Tar Heel or its staff. Editorials reflect the
opinions of The Daily Tar Heel editorial board, which comprises five board
members, the opinion assistant editor and editor and the editor-in-chief.
BAILEY BARGER
BRIAN VAUGHN
PETER VOGEL
KIM HOANG
KERNWILLIAMS
COLIN KANTOR
Opinion Monday, September 15, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 4
SPORTS COLUMN
I
f you missed the mens
soccer game Friday
night, but somehow
managed to sneak down
onto the field after and listen
to Coach Carlos Somoanos
postgame comments, youd
have a hard time figuring out
the result.
His general thoughts on
the game: I didnt like the
way we came out. I felt we
were sluggish and the tempo
of the game was not what
our expectations are.
His thoughts on how the
team implemented its focus
on defensive pressure:
Totally disappointed, he
said. Being one of the things
we emphasized this week,
I thought thats where we
came up a little bit short. We
didnt put that to practice.
To anyone else, it was obvi-
ous the No. 3 North Carolina
team thoroughly dominated
an unranked Pitt team in its
first ACC game of the season.
Eighteen shots to six. Ten
corners to two. Three goals
to none.
The Tar Heels created
many opportunities and con-
trolled possession for the
majority of the game, while
the Panthers could count their
quality chances on one hand.
Carlos Collazo
Assistant Sports Editor
Junior journalism major from
Sanford.
Email: ccollazo@live.unc.edu
When comparing this team
to 2013s, its clear: Somoano
has a really strong group to
work with. He knows it.
Thats why he wasnt happy
with a game most would con-
sider a blowout. He knows
how talented this team is and
where they could go. But for
a team trying to hold its own
against another the storied
womens soccer program
that shares the same field,
Fridays result was subpar.
Championship habits,
he said. Thats what weve
gotta work on. Whether we
can win a championship or
not, I dont know.
While Coach Anson
Dorrance and the womens
team are likely going through
a bit of a slump, theres no
reason to think that Somoano
cant begin building a dynasty
of his own with another
national championship.
Its been three years since
he won the trophy in his first
season with the Tar Heels,
and this 2014 team is loaded.
Fifth-year senior Andy
Craven headlines a flurry of
attacks and was just named
the National Player of the
Week by College Soccer News.
Senior captain Boyd
Okwuonu anchors a defen-
sive line and has started for
the Tar Heels since joining
the team as a freshman,
hauling in defensive honors
and awards each year.
Senior goalkeeper Brendan
Moore led the ACC in shut-
outs, shutout percentage
and save percentage last year
while starting every game.
Thats not to say this team
doesnt have its weak spots.
The wide defensive positions
are still in flux, and less-
experienced players will be
called upon to fill them.
But its hard to discount a
team that seemed so domi-
nant in their first game of the
season while being criticized
so openly by the head coach.
And that, more than any-
thing, tells you a lot about
how good this team really is.
Building a dynasty requires high expectations for success.
Tough love for soccer
sionate about water policy
for most of his life, stemming
from his experiences in arid
countries.
I learned about how
essential it was to build water
platforms, major infrastruc-
ture that can ensure that
people in industries, cities
and agriculture are protected
from droughts, he said.
Briscoe has worked in
multiple places across the
globe, including Bangladesh,
Mozambique and Brazil. In
1986, he started to work for
the World Bank, where he
oversaw water research for
several countries.
When Terry Rhodes, co-
chairwoman of UNCs Water
Theme, was asked about her
thoughts on Briscoes win,
her response was quick and
assured.
Its thrilling and not sur-
prising, just because of the
prominence of research on
water thats been here for
quite some time, she said.
Despite the fact that Briscoe
no longer teaches at UNC, he
still has roots in Chapel Hill.
His daughter, Marla Briscoe
Benton, and her family still
live in the area.
Briscoe Benton, a nurse
at Veritas Collaborative in
Durham, credited her father
for instilling her with a drive
for public service.
He is just an incredible
person and human being. Its
just always been (his goal) to
help people and to help them
lead better lives globally, and
it just doesnt get any better
than that.
university@dailytarheel.com
public response into the plan.
Stancil cited the towns
longtime AAA rating from
both Moodys and Standard
& Poors as further proof
of the towns financial
legitimacy. Stancil said the
town has received recogni-
tion for its budget from
the Government Finance
Officers Association every
year for the past 18 years.
Stancil has been the towns
manager since 2006.
I think that the first ques-
tion is has there been any
form of fraud from the man-
agers office, and the answer
is absolutely not, Chapel Hill
Town Council member Matt
Czajkowski said.
The second question is has
there been reckless fiscal mis-
management, and the answer
to that is also no, he said.
David Schwartz, one of the
signers of the petition, said
that he and other signers will
review Stancils response over
the next several days.
The fact that Mr. Stancil
promptly provided these
detailed explanations of the
towns finances in response
to the petition is a good sign
and inspires confidence,
Schwartz said.
Still, Schwartz said that he
was not completely satisfied
with Stancils response.
Stancil seems to want to
absolve himself of responsi-
bility for the issues raised in
the petition by passing the
buck to the Town Council
members, Schwartz said.
Stancil, of course, is
hardly a passive bystander
in the decision the council
makes about town finances,
because in many cases they
follow the town managers
recommendation.
Czajkowski said he believes
the petition represents a
broader dissatisfaction with
the way developments are
presented to the town.
I feel like the job of the
staff is to present the pros and
cons, so everyone involved
can have a reasoned opinion,
he said.
The way it has been pre-
sented to us is Here is how it is
going to work and here is how
it is going to be presented, and
thats not how decisions with
businesses are made.
Czajkowski noted that he
has not seen this strong of a
mobilization from residents
in the time he has been in
office.
When the town manager
is accused of fiscal misman-
agement, thats a big deal, he
said.
Anyone can throw a peti-
tion, but we certainly havent
seen anything like that in the
years Ive been on the coun-
cil.
city@dailytarheel.com
News Monday, September 15, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 5
SILENT DISCO
FROM PAGE 1
SNACK FOOD
FROM PAGE 1
STANCIL
FROM PAGE 1
music, said she was most
excited about the lack of inhi-
bition students had on the
dance floor.
Junior Mia Whitehead
stayed for the entire event
and said she had fun danc-
ing with other students.
I would go around danc-
ing with people who were on
the same station (as me), just
random people, Whitehead
said.
Sophomore Greg Sollom
attended the event for an
hour and, despite his usual
reservations towards dancing,
said he had fun.
I liked all of it, (and)
I normally hate dancing,
Sollom said.
Junior Kelsey Williams
said dancing was one of her
favorite parts, and she also
liked the inclusiveness the
event allowed.
I liked that everyone
came together and was danc-
ing. You could come up to
any group and dance with
them, she said.
Dougherty said the event
was evidence that music and
partying are changing at UNC
and that he wants to be part
of it.
I hope people are ready
for good music because
thats what Im bringing,
Dougherty said.
In order to host large
events, RHA appropriated
$14,000 for the programming
budget, which is the largest in
its history, Bates said.
Im really excited for RHA
to push in to doing larger
events like this, Bates said.
university@dailytarheel.com
In addition, the program
connects Jack Paley to
resources like 1789 Venture
Lab, a free working space for
student start-ups.
We are plugging him into
high velocity opportunities
because hes a high velocity
kind of entrepreneur, Zoller
said.
Zoller said UNCs entre-
preneurship program has
unique resources that have
attracted student entrepre-
neurs, including those who
have started businesses before
coming to UNC.
What weve built is an
infrastructure to support
transition to entrepreneur-
ship after graduation, Zoller
said. We are extending
our resources just outside
of the university. The day
(students) graduate, they are
supported.
Despite the many oppor-
tunities to expand, Jack Paley
is focusing on slowly growing
his business and finding the
right partner before moving
into wholesale.
I think we will eventually
expand, but right now we are
trying not to let the business
control us, especially Jack,
Douglas Paley said. If we
expanded the business, then
he would become a slave to
the business.
For right now, everything is
part of a juggling act.
Aspen Crunch is less of a
job than more of an extreme
passion, Jack Paley said. I
love doing what I do, and
therefore I cant complain
about it.
university@dailytarheel.com
Former UNC professor
awarded for water work
By Elizabeth Baker
Staff Writer
Author Katy Simpson Smith
might be from Mississippi, but,
if her debut novel The Story of
Land and Sea: A Novel is any
indication, shes got Carolina
on her mind.
Simpson Smith came to
UNC to earn a Ph.D. in his-
tory after graduating from
Mount Holyoke College.
I was just so entranced by
the state when I moved here
that I had to write a book
about it, she said.
Simpson Smith said her
novel, which she will discuss
at Flyleaf Books tonight, is set
in the small town of Beaufort
after a weekend road trip she
took down the states coast.
It was when I was in the
town of Beaufort that I found
this graveyard this 18th
century graveyard. It had a
headstone that said, Girl bur-
ied in rum keg. And I thought
that was a story that just had
to be written, she said. So I
had that kernel in the back of
my head the story of that
little girl for several years.
Simpson Smith, who was
featured in Vogue magazines
July Women to Watch series,
said shes been writing since
she was young, but thought of
it as a hobby versus a career.
I didnt really start tak-
ing myself seriously as a
writer until I was in graduate
school, she said. In my MFA
program after I left UNC, I
discovered that this is exactly
what I need to be doing for
the rest of my life.
Simpson Smith said her
studies in history pushed her
to write.
History was such a won-
derful way to pursue storytell-
ing for me. It never really felt
like I was not following my
dream, she said. I felt very
happy, and yet there was this
tiny part of me in the back of
my head that said, I need to
just go and do this full time.
The Story of Land and Sea
is set during the end years of
the American Revolution.
There are just not enough
records to say for sure how
people felt, she said. So one
of the things I immediately
dive into when I start writing
fiction is all of the stuff we
dont get to hear in history
how people related to each
other and how they loved each
other and how they grieved
when their loved ones died.
Professor Jacquelyn Dowd
Hall, one of Simpson Smiths
advisers at UNC, said whats
inspiring about Simpson
Smiths success is her ability
to take the history she studied
for so long and make it into a
book many people can enjoy.
By Karishma Patel
Staff Writer
Former UNC professor John
Briscoe received the Stockholm
Water Prize, known informally
as the Nobel Prize of water,
earlier this year for his dedica-
tion to working on global water
policies.
Briscoe, a South African
native, taught water manage-
ment from 1981-85 in the
environmental science and
engineering program at what
is now known as the Gillings
School of Public Health.
Currently, he is a professor at
Harvard University.
Briscoe said he felt surprised
but proud when he won.
The award is to me, but
I consider it an award to a
whole group of people who I
call thinking practitioners
the people who actually do
things on the field, he said.
During the 80s, Briscoe
joined Daniel Okuns program
for water research. Okun,
the then-chairman of UNCs
environmental science and
engineering department who
died in 2007, created a curric-
ulum that allowed students to
combine the practice of water
management with academics,
Briscoe said.
(Okun) built one of the
best environmental sciences
programs in the world, which
is still the case at UNC, he
said. I was fortunate to come
and ... continue his tradition.
He said he has been pas-
COURTESY OF MARTA BRISCOE BENTON
Former UNC professor John Briscoe (left) received the Stockholm
Water Prize earlier this year for his work on global water policies.
Author to discuss her
Beaufort-based book tonight
BOOK DISCUSSION
Time: 7 p.m. tonight
Location: Flyleaf Books at
752 Martin Luther King Jr.
Blvd.
Info: http://bit.ly/1sTA6x0
Its such a wonderful exam-
ple of how someone can take a
deep knowledge of history or
of any other subject some-
thing that they have studied
and understood in a deep and
serious way and then trans-
late that understanding into
powerful stories that will reach
people who might not ever
read the scholarship they have
mastered, she said.
Linnie Greene, market-
ing manager at Flyleaf, said
Simpson Smiths novel is
getting a lot of buzz and was
involved in a bidding war at
the 2013 Frankfurt Book Fair.
It was one that from the
get-go the editors at the pub-
lishing houses knew was a real-
ly, really special book, she said.
And we feel the same way.
Greene said while The
Story of Land and Sea is
Simpson Smiths debut novel,
she is sure it wont be her last.
If my instinct is any indica-
tion, this book will be a really,
really big deal, she said.
arts@dailytarheel.com
919-929-0246
UNC Campus Carrboro
412 E. Main Carrboro
EARLY WEEK
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LARGE
3-Topping Pizza
$
1 0
99 $
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108
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99 $
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City Monday, September 15, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 6
Not So Normal 5K reaches nish line
DTH/ PATRICK MILLETT
The Buzztown Band performed at the Not So Normal concert at University Mall on Sunday.
By Patrick Millett
Staff Writer
Carrboros Not So Normal
5K + Weekend concluded
its three days of activities
Sunday afternoon with a
concert at University Mall.
Donations from the
event went to the N.C.
Childrens Hospital and the
ArtsCenter.
The events founder and
organizer Jay Radford said
he was pleased with the
events turnouts, especially
the number of people who
showed up for the 5K
Sunday morning.
Four hundred and sev-
enty runners our first year,
which is unheard of the
first time for a 5K, he said.
It could not have gone bet-
ter. It was amazing.
After seeing the success,
Radford said the event will
be held again in spring 2015.
Admission to the Sunday
afternoon concert was free,
but a $10 donation at the
door was encouraged.
TABLE, a local char-
ity that provides food to
elementary school students
from low-income families in
the area, had a table to col-
lect donations at the concert.
The event was family
friendly with around 90
kids running their own race.
Members of UNCs
Dance Marathon provided
childcare during the race
and at Saturday nights pre-
race dinner at a number of
Carrboro restaurants.
Restaurants, including
Glasshalfull, Spotted Dog
and Elmos Diner, donated
a portion of their proceeds
to various charities in the
area as a part of the event.
Radford didnt know
the total money raised
Sunday night, but he said
Saturday night was hugely
successful.
I know we raised over
$5,000 Saturday night
from the restaurants for the
eight nonprofits they ben-
efited, he said.
Durham resident and
Tobacco Trail Church
member Kristen Linney
won the womens race
event with a time of 20
minutes and 50 seconds.
UNC student and Dance
Marathon finance chair
Landon Sherwood won the
mens event with a time just
more than 18 minutes.
Durham-based
Buzztown Band opened the
concert on Sunday.
Carrboro resident Mandy
Hitchcock attended the
concert to see her friend
perform in the Buzztown
Band but didnt know the
reach of the event.
Were friends with the
band, she said. We knew
they had a race this morn-
ing, but thats all that we
knew.
Chapel Hill resident
Julie McCray was glad she
stumbled upon the event
with her daughter after
having heard about the
5K, even though she didnt
participate.
We come to the mall
every Sunday just to see
whats happening, she said.
Nashville-based band
Stereosparks also per-
formed. The band released
a three-song EP, The Secret
EP, in July.
Storey Condos, the
bands lead singer, said the
band loves performing at
charity events.
We honestly love play-
ing any charity that we
have the opportunity to
play, she said.
This is benefiting the
N.C. Childrens Hospital
and the arts community,
and were big supporters
of both of those organiza-
tions.
Other events included
a pajama party at the
Carrboro ArtsCenter,
a comedy show at DSI
Comedy Theater in
Carrboro and the art walk
in Carrboro.
city@dailytarheel.com
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national origin, handicap, marital status.
Child Care Services
KIDS KLUBHOUSE DROP IN CARE. Offering
child care your way. Ages 1-12 years-old. M-Sa
7:30am-midnite. Morning program, after-
school. With set rate or $8/hr. 919-370-2699.
Child Care Wanted
AFTERNOON SITTER FOR 2 BOYS: Experienced
sitter needed ASAP 2-3 days/wk, 2:30-6:30pm
for 2 fun, imaginative boys, 8 and 12. We live
close to UNC campus. Sitter must have own
car, be willing to drive to activities, no cat
allergies, supervise homework and have fun
with kids. Excellent driving record, non-smoker
and references. $12-15/hr. +gas money.
stchapelhill@gmail.com.
AFTERNOON NANNY
NEEDED
A fun Chapel Hill family is looking for a great
nanny 1:30-7pm 4-5 days/wk. for the school
year. Flexible hours based on class schedule.
Clean driving record preferred. Competitive $.
tdx360@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL DRIVER, SITTER needed for 2
cooperative middle schoolers. 3- 5 days/wk.
depending on your schedule. 3:15-6pm. Pick
up at Durham Academy Middle, drive to home
nearby, sometimes drive to soccer practice
in Chapel Hill. Competitive rate! Call or text
919-360-6605.
TU-TH, AFTERNOON BABYSITTING. Sitter
for 2 girls (10, 7) in Carrboro, ASAP Tu-
Th, 2:40-5:40pm. Must own car, super-
vise homework and activities. Competi-
tive rate. Email caydin@email.unc.edu,
704-756-3274.
BABYSITTER: Loving and responsible sit-
ter needed to care for 18 month-old girl in
Chapel Hill 3-6 hours/wk. Competitive rate
dependent on references and experience.
abigail.e.dean@gmail.com.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE wanted 3 days/
wk from 3-6pm, awesome kids ages 6, 8,
11. Neighborhood near to campus. Com-
petitive pay. Email dieldo@gmail.com or call
267-970-7465.
AFTERSCHOOL CHILD CARE. Need you to meet
the school bus and take my daughter to swim
practice on M/W. $15/hr. Clean driving record
and references, please 919-969-8281.
LOOKING FOR experienced child care provider
for 1 child. Position requires good driving re-
cord and references. 2:30-6pm 4 days/wk. Pays
$15/hr. Email amycking@gmail.com.
SEEKING HELP: After kindergarten pick up
and care in Chapel Hill, 4-6pm twice weekly.
Must enjoy fun, active play. Competitive pay
+gas. Email mmclamb2000@yahoo.com if
interested.
BABYSITTER NEEDED. $12-$15/hr. We are
looking to nd a couple of people to do oc-
casional babysitting various times during
the week and weekend for our 3 girls (12,
8 and 1). Must have own transportation.
scott.ogle@sageworks.com.
For Rent
FAIR HOUSING
ALL REAL ESTATE AND RENTAL advertising in
this newspaper is subject to the Federal Fair
Housing Act of 1968 which makes it illegal to
advertise any preference, limitation, or dis-
crimination based on race, color, religion, sex,
handicap, familial status, or national origin,
or an intention to make any such preference,
limitation, or discrimination. This newspa-
per will not knowingly accept any advertising
which is in violation of the law. Our readers
are hereby informed that all dwellings adver-
tised in this newspaper are available on an
equal opportunity basis in accordance with
the law. To complain of discrimination, call
the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development housing discrimination hotline:
1-800-669-9777.
WALK TO CAMPUS. 2BR/1BA. Fully renovated.
W/D. Dishwasher. Central AC, heat. Available
immediately, $875/mo. Merciarentals.com,
919-933-8143.
MCCAULEY STREET 3BR/1BA. Walk to campus.
Full kitchen. W/D, parking. Initial lease thru
May 31, 2015. $1,700/mo. +utilities. Contact
sduval-shave@nc.rr.com or 919-370-9467.
CHARMING STUDIO APARTMENT. Kitchen,
TV, furnished. Private entrance, outdoor ter-
race; utilities included; lake and beach privi-
leges. Suitable for graduate student. $675/mo.
919-259-2536.
3BR/2BA HOUSE ON LARGE LOT, 19 Frances
Street near Eastgate, University Mall, many
buslines. Hardwood oors, replace, large
deck, fenced in back yard. Pets with fee.
$1400/mo. Fran Holland Properties, fholland-
prop@gmail.com or text 919 630-3229.
1BR. 207-A CARR STREET. 4 blocks to Franklin
Street. Available now. $600/mo. Fran Holland
Properties. fhollandprop@gmail.com or text
919-630-3229.
READY NOW! 4BR/2BA. Walk to campus,
downtown. Remodeled. Hardwoods and
tile, stainless steel appliances and W/D.
Water included. $2,600/mo. Carolina
Realty, 919-967-6408.
GARAGE APARTMENT. Quiet, wooded neigh-
borhood. Private entrance. Full kitchen. Car-
peting. Separate living room, bedroom, bath-
room. Many windows. Partly furnished. $745/
mo. includes utilities, cable, internet. Avail-
able. 919-929-6072.
MODELS NEEDED for evening sessions for
Durham sculpture studio. Classical gure and
portrait. Andrew Bryan, 919-929-9913.
OIN US: Part-time handiwork and/or market-
ing for reputable home improvement company.
Pay and commission. raye81@yahoo.com,
www.xallservices.com. 919-990-1072.
PART-TIME SWIM COACHES for local USA
swimming club. 2-4 evenings/wk. Send resume
and 3 references to monstott11@gmail.com.
HELP WANTED: Mama Dips Restaurant at 408
West Rosemary Street in Chapel Hill is now ac-
cepting applications for full-time and part-time
servers and hosts. Must be able to work week-
ends. No phone calls please. Apply in person
M-F, no applications accepted between lunch
time (11am-2pm).
THE CHAPEL HILL-CARRBORO YMCA is ac-
cepting applications for member service staff.
Must have customer service, computer and
phone system experience. Apply online at
http://www.ymcatriangle.org/y-jobs. EOE.
CAREGIVER, CARE COORDINATOR in CHA-
PEL HILL (25-30+ hrs/wk) to care for retired
female professor. College education and CNA
certication required, RNs welcome. After-
noon and some evenings, 4-5 days/wk. $25/
hr. with FICA, social security (pay adjustable
to qualications). Respond with rsum, 3
references and 20 or less lines about yourself
CaregivinginChapelHill@gmail.com.
BUSY RETINOVASCULAR PRACTICE
seeks friendly, motivated, energetic
individual to work as an ophthalmic
assistant. Will be trained to use ultra-
sound electrodiagnostic equipment
and multiple instruments used in the
diagnosis of retinovascular disease.
Candidate would nd experience chal-
lenging and fullling. Fax resume to
919-787-3591 or email resume to
southerneyeassociates@yahoo.com.
TATTOO ARTIST: Lyceum Tattoo is hiring
for the following positions: 1. Tattoo
artist. 2. Body piercers. 3. Sales coun-
ter. 4. Marketing. Email applications to
danelkinsjr@gmail.com.
GYMNASTICS INSTRUCTOR: Chapel Hill
Gymnastics has part-time positions avail-
able for energetic, enthusiastic instructors.
Applicants with knowledge of gymnastic
terminology and progression skills preferred,
but will train right candidate. Must be good
with children and available to work 3:30-
7:30pm, some weekends. Send a resume to
margie@chapelhillgymnastics.com.
PART-TIME RECEPTIONIST NEEDED. Urban
Fringe, a busy salon in Chapel Hill, is look-
ing for an energetic, organized, fun loving
person to join our TEAM! Send resume to
urbanfringesalon@gmail.com.
Homes For Sale
2BR CONDO, UNDER $300,000. Within a
half mile of Franklin Street. Consider 2BR
condo FOR SALE, under $300,000. One half
mile from Franklin Street. Well maintained,
secure building. Living area all on one level.
Elevator to pool and garage. Hardwoods,
new appliances. Contact agent for nancial
information: Suzi Johnson, Allen Tate Realtors,
suzi.johnson@allentate.com, 919-724-7384.
Services
LICENSED COSMETOLOGIST: Offering braiding,
cornrows, sew ins, natural styles, full service
waxing, makeovers, lashes, photography ser-
vices and glam parties. W-Sa. 919-370-2699.
NC EDU CONSULTING. Bilingual Spanish
and English writing, editing, tutoring
service in the Triangle. nceduconsulting.
businesscatalyst.com. Also, check out
the blog Cloud-Escape and see if youd
like to contribute!
LAWN SERVICE: Professional lawn care ser-
vices for you. Family business you can count
on. We mow and trim. Other services i.e. leave
blowing, seeding, aeration, planting, fertiliz-
ing, hedge trimming. Call 919-672-3777 son or
919-672-7336 owner Lee.
RESUME WRITING SERVICE. Resumes: Ev-
erybody needs one! Is yours up to par?
Resume Uplift ensures it is. Mention
College Special for 15% off order.
www.resumeuplift.com.
LSAT TUTOR
Experienced and affordable tutoring for
your upcoming LSAT. Do you want to im-
prove your score? I can help! Contact
lsattutor27514@gmail.com.
Volunteering
BE AN ESL VOLUNTEER! Help school age
ESL students from various countries, Chapel
Hill-Carrboro schools. Training 9/23 or 9/30,
5:30-9pm. Register: http://bit.ly/CHCCSvolun-
teer. Email:gmccay@chccs.k12.nc.us or call
919-967-8211 ext. 28339.
Help Wanted Help Wanted Services Services Help Wanted
Child Care Wanted
Child Care Wanted
BR = Bedroom BA = Bath mo = month hr = hour wk = week W/D = washer/dryer OBO = or best offer AC = air conditioning w/ = with LR = living room

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UNC Community
SERVICE DIRECTORY
ALL IMMIGRATION MATTERS
REDUCED FEE FOR FACULTY & STUDENTS!
Work Visas Green Cards Citizenship
NC Board Certified Attorney Specialist
LISA BRENMAN 919-932-4593 visas-us.com
Its easy to place
a DTH Classified...
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Help Wanted
Data Monitors - Bilingual in Japanese or Brazilian-Portuguese
NeuroCog Trials, a rapidly growing company in Durham with close ties to Duke University Medical Cent er is
seeking: Full-time bi-lingual data monitors fluent in both English and Japanese or Brazilian-Portugu ese. Data
Monitors will assist in, review and learn rater certification on neurocognitive test batteries for m ulti-site
pharmaceutical company trials and provide forward and back translations of communications between
NeuroCog Trials and clinical sites. Travel to US or international meetings is required. Requiremen ts: BA in
psychology, neurosciences or related field. Fluency in English and any of the languages above with the
ability to speak, read and write in both languages. A language validation test will be performed. Ability to
travel as needed. We request that all applicants submit resume and cover letter to:
mailto:hr@neurocogtrials.com
HOROSCOPES
To get the advantage, check the day's rating: 10 is the easiest day, 0 the most challenging.
Libra (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Limit entertainment spend-
ing, unless work-related. Talk about your
ideals. Expand your horizons and get out
there. Study, research and visit an object of
fascination, virtually or in person. Schedule
romance for later.
Scorpio (Oct. 23-Nov. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Chart the road map to a
future you envision, and plot the nancial re-
quirements. Friends and your mate are full of
ideas. Share boundless optimism. Someone
shows his or her true colors. Together, you
can realize a dream.
Sagittarius (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
Today is a 7 -- Communicate to resolve
disagreements in a partnership. Share
ndings. Wait to see what develops. Keep
track of earnings. Youre learning how to
do without something you once thought
essential. Friends help build your condence.
Be adaptable.
Capricorn (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Today is an 8 -- Provide excellent service, to
others and yourself. Writing and research
produce results. Think before you speak.
Correspond and discuss project details. You
dont need to be there physically. Conserve
resources. Recharge with natural beauty.
Aquarius (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
Today is a 7 -- The gears begin to turn on an
interesting new project. Join a good team.
Take care. Dress for success. Invest in your
business. Postpone a romantic outing for
after the game. Keep a secret.
Pisces (Feb. 19-March 20)
Today is a 7 -- Discuss home improvements
with your partner and family. Let friends
help. A barrier to your objectives could
arise... patiently work around it. Confer with
a sensible person. Delegate to a perfectionist.
Act for love.
Aries (March 21-April 19)
Today is a 6 -- Hold onto your money. Do
the work yourself, and save. Communica-
tions are back on track now. Record your
ideas. Discuss collaborations and let others
lead. Postpone romance and follow your
creative muse.
Taurus (April 20-May 20)
Today is an 8 -- Say yes to a fun, protable
idea. Caring actions garner support. Absent
members phone in. Listen to all consider-
ations. You have what you need. Visit an art
museum. Love is the answer.
Gemini (May 21-June 20)
Today is an 8 -- Youre on a creative roll.
Issue press releases, post to your blog, and
connect with your social peeps. Share the
interesting news you nd. Increase the
efciency of your distribution. Speak from
your heart.
Cancer (June 21-July 22)
Today is a 7 -- Keep costs down. Make lists.
Let family help you streamline routines and
share chores. Dont provide frills or extra
treats. Take the philosophical path less
traveled. Ask for feedback. Trim the uff.
Consider the larger perspective.
Leo (July 23-Aug. 22)
Today is a 7 -- Resist the temptation to buy
something expensive. Hold out for the best
deal. Ask friends for recommendations and
reviews. You may nd a suitable alternative
for much less. Celebrate with people you
adore.
Virgo (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Today is a 6 -- Networking benets your
career status today. Spend time getting
social. Creative communications come
easily... dive into a writing or recording
project with passion. Take time to work out
disagreements and to align on the vision.
(c) 2014 TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.
If September 15th is Your Birthday...
Creativity, innovation and self-discovery
highlight this year. Get your message out to
expanding networks. After 12/23 (and for the
next few years), changes at home come easier.
Adapt with transitions. Unstable finances
require flexibility and preparation.
A romance levels up after the 3/20 eclipse.
Share fantasies and dreams. Grow the love.
Gain Valuable Experience in Intellectual
and Developmental Disabilities
Weekend hours are available working with children and adults with
developmental disabilities, helping them achieve their personal goals.
Gain valuable experience for psychology, sociology, nursing majors, and
other related fields. Various shifts available. $10.10/hr.
APPLY ONLINE by visiting us at:
www.rsi-nc.org
Residential Services, Inc.
418926
Do you like to gamble?
Cigarette smokers and non-smokers betwee the ages of 18-55 with no
known health problems who enjoy gambling are needed for a
research study. You do not have to be interested in quitting smoking
long-term. The study involves one visit.
Compensation is available.
For more information, call
919-668-4131
Pro00049191
RECYCLE ME PLEASE! QUESTIONS? 962-0252
Place a Classified Today!
dailytarheel.com/classifieds
News Monday, September 15, 2014 The Daily Tar Heel 7
Paws4Ever Legacy
A Mebane-based uncon-
ventional animal shelter has
started its Legacy Car pro-
gram. See pg. 3 for story.
Silent Disco
The Residence Hall
Association hosted its larg-
est-ever event on Friday.
See pg. 1 for story.
Author at Flyleaf
Katy Simpson Smith will
discuss her latest book at
Flyleaf tonight. See pg. 5 for
story.
CHCCS composting
The district is taking a
couple of middle school stu-
dents advice on compost-
ing. See pg. 3 for story.
games
Solution to
Fridays puzzle
Complete the grid
so each row, column
and 3-by-3 box (in
bold borders) contains
every digit 1 to 9.
2014 The Mepham Group. All rights reserved.
Level: 1 2 3 4
(C)2014 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved. Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle
ACROSS
1 Story
5 Gauge on a dash
9 Lowest opera voice
14 Landed on the runway
15 Sunburn soother
16 Starting squad
17 Window material
19 Beauty at the ball
20 French friend
21 Rapture
23 Marshland
24 Legendary skater Henie
26 If it only could be
28 The Autobiography of
Alice B. Toklas author
34 Indian or Chinese, e.g.
35 Nametag greeting
36 Harbinger
39 Hindu guru
42 Imitated
43 Images on a desktop
45 Brides beloved
47 One coming in from the
bullpen
51 Thigh bone
52 Feel around in
the dark
55 N.C. States
conference
57 Early
metalworking
period
61 Hush-hush fed.
org.
62 Centrally
managed store
group
64 Explosive
situation
66 Metamorphosis
stage
67 Scat legend Fitzgerald
68 __ upon a
time ...
69 Speak
70 Optimistic
71 Brew found in increasing
quantities in the ends of
17-, 28-, 47- and
64-Across
DOWN
1 Spanish appetizers
2 Texas mission
3 Every clouds silver
feature?
4 Somme summer
5 Soft mineral
6 Ah, me!
7 What you pay
8 Half a guy-gal argument
9 Infantile
10 Had dinner
11 For Dummies
bookstore section
12 Reduced-price event
13 Harbinger
18 Drive and reverse
22 Stockholms land: Abbr.
25 Lady in the 1965 sitcom
pilot episode The Lady
in the Bottle
27 Pot for clams
29 __ better to have loved
...: Tennyson
30 How half-shell clams are
eaten
31 Eel, at sushi bars
32 Land in la mer
33 Silent agreement
36 Knights title
37 Cubes in a bucket
38 Wheels on the links
40 Mohawk-sporting actor
41 Biennial games gp.
44 Advanced college course
46 Golly
48 Cats coat
49 Like capitalized nouns
50 Legendary football coach
Knute
53 Cake serving
54 Like the idiomatic beaver
55 Civil rights org.
56 Online dialogue
58 __ contendere: court plea
59 Leatherworking tools
60 Down Under greeting
63 __ got it!
65 Director Reiner
UNC-system happenings
A regular update on
UNC-system schools.
Compiled by senior writers Sarah Brown
and Hayley Fowler.
ASU freshman found dead Pope Center takes aim at State McCrory talks degrees at WCU UNC-Ps enrollment increases
An Appalachian State
University freshman who
had been missing for
11 days was found dead
close to campus Saturday morning.
Anna Marie Smith, 18, of High Point, was
reported missing Sept. 3 by her roommate
after she was last seen in her on-campus resi-
dence hall on Sept. 2.
A statement released by the Boone Police
Department said that the cause of death is
unknown and that Smiths body has been
sent to Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center
for an autopsy.
I find strength in the great power of
our community to support those with bro-
ken hearts and burdened spirits who have
been powerfully affected by the loss of this
bright young light, said Sheri Everts, ASUs
chancellor, in a statement sent to students
Saturday.
Smiths disappearance was considered
voluntary. Her laptop and cell phone were in
her parents possession at the time of her dis-
appearance, and police found no evidence of
sexual assault, according to the updates.
The Pope Center
took shots at N.C. State
Universitys general edu-
cation program at a panel
discussion Thursday.
Jay Schalin, the cen-
ters policy director,
authored a May report that called N.C. States
program a smorgasbord. He said Thursday
that the number of courses offered should be
much smaller and that they should focus on
broader subjects and critical thinking.
A well crafted gen-ed program and a lot of
choice cant coexist very well, he said.
But David Zonderman, chairman of the fac-
ulty, said most students choose a broad range
of courses at the general education level.
They are in fact taking advantage of the
smorgasbord, not just picking out the marsh-
mallows and leaving the fruits and vegetables.
Zonderman added that Schalins methodol-
ogy was flawed because he made no effort to
study course syllabuses or student experiences.
It strikes me as a list of courses that are
cherry-picked mainly based on, from what I
could tell, their titles, he said.
During Fridays meet-
ing of the UNC Board
of Governors at Western
Carolina University, Gov.
Pat McCrory touted the need for a faster path
to a college degree.
Maybe we shouldnt take four years
to get a degree, he said, according to the
(Raleigh) News & Observer. Maybe we
shouldnt take two years to get an MBA.
McCrory also praised the UNC systems
strategic plan and its goal of raising the
percentage of bachelors degree holders
among the states population to 32 percent
by 2018.
He also spun the conversation to the
states economy and job creation efforts.
I will not be successful at recruiting jobs
in western North Carolina unless I have the
talent to fill them, and Western Carolina
University is a major part of finding that tal-
ent, McCrory said.
The meeting coincided with WCUs 125th
anniversary. The school announced Sept. 3
that total enrollment for the fall set a record
with 10,382 students.
Historically minority
colleges in North Carolina
have experienced declin-
ing enrollment, but UNC-
Pembroke broke its trend
this year for the first time
since 2009.
The university enrolled 1,074 freshmen for
the 2014-15 academic year the third larg-
est freshman class in UNC-P history.
Enrollment at UNC-P declined 6.5 per-
cent from 2009 to 2013, and a statement
released Friday said university officials put
significant effort into reversing that trend.
Recruitment strategies were modified,
materials and the website were redesigned,
articulation agreements and relationships with
community colleges were improved, said Kyle
R. Carter, UNC-P chancellor.
Freshmen retention rate also increased,
with a 68.2 percent retention rate from fresh-
man to sophomore year, and the university
has seen a record-high number of transfers.
Prospective students and parents have got-
ten the message about all that UNCP has to
offer, said Ken Kitts, the schools provost.
Out of the swimming pool, into the ocean
By Danielle Herman
Senior Writer
North Carolina swimmers
werent just competing against
other swimmers Saturday
they were taking on the ocean.
Even though the event
wasnt required, members of
the UNC swimming and diving
team benefited from compet-
ing in the open-water Pier-2-
Pier race in Wrightsville Beach
on Saturday.
The race, which is approxi-
mately two miles between the
Johnny Mercer and Crystal
Piers, is dedicated to Ryan Alea
Young, a UNC-Wilmington
swimmer who died in a car
accident in 2009.
There is still a competitive
part of it, but I think that it
being at a beach and some
people having some worries
about it being an ocean and
that kind of thing theres a
lot more joking around and a
lot more of a fun atmosphere
to it, said assistant volunteer
coach Chip Peterson.
Coach Rich DeSelm said the
race provided an early oppor-
tunity for swimmers to race.
Its an open water race
thats early in the season that
we started offering to our
team members as an option
if they wanted to go and get a
race in and have a day on the
beach, he said.
We had just under 20
people go, and weve had a lot
of success with people placing
high or winning their division.
This year, that meant suc-
cess for former swimmers.
Peterson, who swam for
UNC from 2007 to 2010,
won the mens race. He also
placed sixth in the 2014
U.S. National Open Water
Championship in June for the
5K, qualifying to be on the
national open water team,
DeSelm said.
Open-water races in the
ocean present unique oppor-
tunities for swimmers, as there
are more tactical elements,
including navigation and draft-
ing. The race offered swimmers
a chance to shake up their nor-
mal routine while still getting
an opportunity to train.
Its a fun, spirited compe-
tition, Peterson said. Some
of the girls who are more
distance-oriented were chal-
lenging some of the guys who
were more sprint-oriented.
On the womens side, UNC
sophomore Caty Hulsey won
the womens race. She had
never done an open-water race
in the ocean before and noticed
an immediate difference.
I think the waves made
a big difference, she said.
I kept zigzagging back and
forth in the waves, and it
made it a lot harder to keep
going on in a straight course.
Hulsey said the weekend
was exciting, yet relaxing.
The race is not associated
with the NCAA, and there was
a range of competition.
There were definitely some
people that this is what they
do open-water races and
they came across the country
to do this event, Hulsey said.
There were some other
college teams here, like Navy
brought their whole womens
team to kind of have like a
fun weekend and try to do
something like we did.
Hulsey said the race was
more about getting into a
competitive mode before the
regular season begins against
Tennessee in October.
It was really hard, but I
liked the challenge of it, she
said. It was good to get the
season started with some-
thing that doesnt really mat-
ter how you do for the team
as much as getting your body
used to racing again.
sports@dailytarheel.com
Craddocks goal says what her words dont have to
By Dylan Howlett
Senior Writer
There is little point,
Charlotte Craddock believes, to
saying whats already been said.
She declined to speak with
the assembled field hockey
media Friday night at Henry
Stadium after No. 1 North
Carolina dispatched No. 5
Syracuse, 3-0. For what could
she have added, with more vol-
ume or eloquent panache, than
the incendiary goal she scored
to put UNC up for good?
Thats the coolest goal
Ive seen all year, said senior
forward Loren Shealy, who
scored UNCs second goal.
That was pretty sweet.
Her goal was amazing,
junior forward Casey Di
Nardo said. She juked, like,
three people. I was inside
laughing, but mentally hop-
ing that she would score. It
was a great goal.
Spectacular, Coach Karen
Shelton said. She makes it
look easy, doesnt she?
The senior forward
authored her latest seeing-is-
believing moment little more
than nine minutes into Friday
nights game.
Craddock blitzed the
Syracuse back line with
a swooping, one-handed,
30-yard jaunt down the far
sideline and barreled toward
the Oranges cage. When
Syracuse goalkeeper Jess Jecko
charged off her line, Craddock
curled around her with unhur-
ried ease and tucked the ball
into the vacant net. Her team-
leading fifth goal of the season
marked the third straight game
she scored the first goal.
The reigning ACC Field
Hockey Player of the Week
prefers to vocalize in precisely
this fashion, with timely goals
and sparkling runs rather than
postgame blather. That doesnt
suit the 23-year-old England
native. Interview requests
often go unfilled, but rarely
does the opponents net when
DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
UNC forward Charlotte Craddock sets up for a shot against
Syracuse University during Fridays match in Chapel Hill.
Craddock stalks the field.
She adds a dimension to
our team thats pretty special,
Shelton said.
Since joining the program
in 2012, Craddock has scored
more goals (44) and game-
winning goals (14) through
Friday nights game than any
Tar Heel in that span. She has
scored 1.05 goals-per-game in
42 career matches, outpacing
UNCs all-time leading scorer
Cindy Werley, who scored 84
goals in 90 games from 1993
to 1997. Craddock owns UNCs
sophomore scoring record with
26 goals and found the net five
times in UNCs three NCAA
tournament games in 2013.
But Craddock and Shelton
have often sparred, the coach
questioning her players com-
mitment and the player criti-
cizing her coachs demanding
approach. The chill thawed
this spring when Craddock
told Shelton that she wanted
nothing more than a national
title. She would do what was
right, what was necessary. And,
Shelton said, she has.
Attitude is a wonderful
thing: It can be a bad thing,
and it can be a good thing,
Shelton said. Charlotte has
grown up an awful lot.
Craddock rededicated her-
self to training and rediscov-
ered her affinity for the game.
She doubles as a conductor on
the forward line, Shealy and Di
Nardo said: communicating
emphatically, directing traffic,
urging runs toward the corner
or opposing net.
Shes a joy to play with
because shes very constructive
and to the point very blunt
on the field, tells you where to
be which scores goals, ulti-
mately, Di Nardo said.
It also makes the game more
fun and compliance far easier.
She goes with everything
wholeheartedly, Di Nardo
said. I think shes really lov-
ing the team right now.
Her smile suggests it. So,
too, does her torrid goal-scor-
ing streak. But her words?
Im telling you right now:
Youre not going to get Char,
Shealy said to reporters, chuck-
ling. Its not going to happen.
They could only get her
for 70 minutes, confined to
Craddocks artistry within the
fields white lines. It required
no further utterance.
The star had already spoken.
sports@dailytarheel.com
The field hockey star
scored her fifth goal
of the season Friday.
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SportsMonday
dailytarheel.com The Daily Tar Heel 8
SCOREBOARD
TENNIS: Hayley Carter third in the Blue
Bracket of the Duke Fab Four Invite
SWIMMING: Caty Hulsey first place in the
womens Pier-2-Pier
FOLLOW US ON TWITTER: @DTHSports
DTH/CHRIS CONWAY
UNCs volleyball team embraces between plays during its match against Georgia Southern Saturday. The match was the second of three contests that the Tar Heels would play in the Carolina Classic.
By Ben Coley
Staff Writer
The drama was building.
With the score deadlocked at 14 in
the fifth set, the No. 17 North Carolina
volleyball team was feeling the pres-
sure. No. 16 Kentucky had just reeled
off four straight points and was look-
ing for two more to seal the match.
But by the end, it wasnt the
Wildcats who roared. It was the Tar
Heels.
UNC defeated Kentucky 3-2
for its first home win of the season
Friday, and the momentum con-
tinued as the Tar Heels cruised to
victories over Georgia Southern and
Virginia Commonwealth Saturday to
win the Carolina Classic.
The Tar Heels win over the
Wildcats was the teams second victo-
ry over a top 20 opponent this season.
Coach Joe Sagula said he was
proud of the teams comeback
against Kentucky, even with the dra-
matic ending.
I probably aged about five years
tonight, Sagula said. Luckily you
cant see the gray hair, but it got a lot
grayer tonight.
The Tar Heels took a close first
set, but the Wildcats stormed back
to win the next two sets because of
several UNC miscues.
We lost focus, and then our
passing fell apart, Sagula said. We
didnt make the adjustments.
Despite being down two sets to
one, the Tar Heels pushed back with
a dominating 25-13 win of their own
to tie the match and eventually go
on to win the fifth and final set.
Senior Ece Taner, who was named
the tournaments MVP, said the
team was frustrated with its perfor-
mance against Kentucky at times
but also said players stepped up
when it counted.
We never really stopped fighting,
Taner said. So whenever we came in
the huddle we said, Play for your left
and your right; play for each other.
Junior Leigh Andrew said the
team could not dwell on the errors
that filled the second and third set.
We mentally stayed aggressive,
Andrew said. We couldnt just cut
back the errors and stay passive. We
had to just keep going at it.
In UNCs remaining two matches
against Georgia Southern and VCU,
the Tar Heels made sure to play
down the theatrics.
Both matches were won in
straight sets, and the Tar Heels only
trailed once all day Saturday.
Senior Lauren McAdoo said that
all the teams presented a challenge
to UNC because of their quick
offense.
But she added that the team made
its adjustments, and the victories will
help them later in the season.
All of these teams were really
good probably NCAA Tournament
caliber teams and to come out
with three wins, especially against
No. 16 Kentucky, is awesome for us
confidence-wise, McAdoo said.
Going forward, we know that we
have the ability to beat teams of that
caliber.
sports@dailytarheel.com
The volleyball team went
undefeated this weekend
in its annual tournament.
FIELD HOCKEY: NORTH CAROLINA 3, SYRACUSE 0
VOLLEYBALL: NORTH CAROLINA 3, KENTUCKY 2
BUMP, SET, SPIKE: UNC
SWEEPS CAROLINA CLASSIC
Perfect eld hockey
team topples Orange
Jabang powers
soccer past Pitt
MENS SOCCER: NORTH CAROLINA 3, PITTSBURGH 0
North Carolina forward Charlotte Craddock (5) makes her way down field.
By Danielle Herman
Senior Writer
It was a physical game, fast-paced
and a little rough and at the end,
North Carolina was satisfied to see a
big, fat zero on the scoreboard.
The No. 1 ranked North Carolina
field hockey team (5-0, 1-0 ACC) took
down the No. 5 Syracuse Orange (6-1,
0-1 ACC) 3-0 in its first shutout of
the season Friday in Chapel Hill.
We wanted to get a shutout,
senior forward Loren Shealy said.
That was one of our goals.
UNC got on the board early after
a goal by senior forward Charlotte
Craddock, who slipped around several
defenders and the goalkeeper to send
the ball into the net. Shealy scored the
second goal off a pass from redshirt
freshman Sam Night, and junior mid-
fielder Nina Notman scored the third
on a penalty stroke in the second half.
Coach Karen Shelton said UNC
looked fundamentally sound and
communicated well areas she want-
ed her players to improve on.
(The Orange) are a very hard-
working blue-collar team, she said.
I think theyre very talented, and it
was a tall task for our group today.
Defensively, the Tar Heels played a
tight game. Syracuse had four players
at midfield, so UNC dropped a for-
ward back to help with coverage.
Intercept mentality was a huge
focus, Shealy said. We stayed close
to our marks, which helped us inter-
cept a lot, and kind of kept it out of
our circle, which was a focus.
The defense held Syracuse to seven
shots, and sophomore goalkeeper
Shannon Johnson made four saves.
Even with its early success, UNC
isnt losing sight of its long-term goals
or its focus, and Shelton said there
are still areas where the team needs to
improve, including ball possession.
You notice that for periods of
time in the first half, it was kind of
turnover, turnover, turnover. It was
a fast and furious game, a wide-open
game, which we like playing. I think
we thrive in a wide-open game, but
we want to have better possessions,
she said. We dont want to give it up
cheaply.
But its clear to Shelton and the
team that UNC is gelling. Junior for-
ward Casey Di Nardo said the team
By Carlos Collazo
Assistant Sports Editor
Friday was a night of many firsts
for the No. 3 North Carolina mens
soccer team.
It was the first ACC victory of
the season, as the Tar Heels took
down Pittsburgh 3-0.
It was the first career goal for
freshman forward Alan Winn, play-
ing in his first conference matchup.
And maybe most importantly,
it meant the first points a first
assist and first goal for redshirt
sophomore midfielder Nyambi
Jabang, whos been waiting for this
moment for years.
Everything started in the first
half with his assist to Winn for the
first goal of the game.
I saw Allen at the top of the box,
Jabang said. And he made a good
finish. He came to me, he said, You
assisted me on my first career goal.
And Im like, I gotta get me one
too.
He did exactly that in the 69th
minute after receiving a pass
from sophomore defender Colton
Storm. With one touch, he played
the ball ahead of Storm and then
followed the play down the wing.
Storm took his defender to the
end line and stopped the ball right in
front of Jabang he didnt hesitate.
Im a one-v-one player, Jabang
said. I love dribbling, love going
against defenses.
Jabang took the ball between two
Pitt defenders and dashed into the
box, another defender moving to
help. Jabang faked toward the end
line and made a quick touch to the
right, crossing his third defender.
He settled the ball with another
touch. A fourth defender shuffled
in front of him. Jabang put his head
down and fired. The shot grazed
the final defender, carried over Pitt
keeper Dan Lynds head and settled
into the back of the net.
It was three years late, but Jabang
finally had his first goal with UNC.
His is an amazing story, Coach
Carlos Somoano said. Tore his
ACL in high school, came in, three
weeks in here he tore his meniscus.
Three weeks later, broke his leg
six months later tore his other ACL
again.
We know he was an unbelievable
talent in high school, and thats why
we brought him here. And we hoped
that he would come in to play right
away as a freshman, but it didnt
happen for those reasons.
Now, Jabang is healthy and fight-
ing for the field, along with Winn.
You always want to be on the
field, but at the end of the day its
about the team, Winn said.
With veterans Andy Craven, Rob
Lovejoy and Tyler Engel in the fold,
getting on the field can be difficult.
Its challenging for me, Jabang
said. Theyre good players; they
are scoring goals. I have to make
sure I get in there too, and its a
fight every practice.
When you have a chance to get
in you have to make an impact
on the game.
And Friday night, after years of
injury and disappointment, Jabang
made his.
sports@dailytarheel.com
DTH/CAMERON ROBERT
is celebrating more enthusiastically
screaming, jumping up and down,
punching each others arms than it
has in the past, creating a more posi-
tive environment.
We celebrated but not to that
extreme, and this year the celebrating,
I think, is getting us amped to keep
scoring and scoring and scoring, Di
Nardo said. I think thats the com-
pletely new atmosphere on the team
thats driving us to be so successful.
With the win, UNC broke its pat-
tern of alternating wins against the
Orange, as UNC has now won the
past two games.
Shelton said UNC looked com-
posed and unselfish.
This is a good day for us, she
said. And were beat up. So its nice
to have a rest.
sports@dailytarheel.com
DTH INSIDE: See page 7
to read about Charlotte Crad-
docks game-changing goal.

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